Lori Lubeski: I would have to say that all of my writing is no more than a mere emotional expulsion. I would have to say that I never have any idea what might occur when I begin to write. I would have to say that I sometimes begin with a concept; in the case of this work, I found a paint sample strip in the hardware store which was called pilgrimage foliage, and I thought that was a beautiful name for a color (it was a shade of rust/brick) and also a perfect name for a poem I wrote the title on the top of the page, and alas…
The poem disperse you followed a similar pattern; the concept here was the word Tourniquet and how a person could literally serve as an emotional tourniquet for another, stopping a dramatic bleed by simply listening and being there. The removal of the tourniquet would result in certain death, and the poem becomes an expression of an unbearable thought of an unbearable loss.
Lori Lubeski is the author of Dissuasion crowds the slow worker; STAMINA; Obedient, A body; eyes dipped in longitude lines; and Undermined. She collaborated with printmaker Jakub Kalousek on TRICKLE and Sweet Land, and with artist Jeannette Landrie on has the river of the body risen. New work is featured in Let The Bucket Down, and her forthcoming poetry collection, pilgrimage foliage, will be published this year by Spot Lit Press. Lori lives in Boston, where she teaches at Curry College and Boston University.